The field of perovskite photovoltaics research is currently undergoing rapid development and is considered to be one of the most promising renewable energy technologies to date. CHEOPS - an EU funded project aiming at achieving low cost and highly efficient perovskite solar cells - has therefore taken the initiative to gather all major EU-funded perovskite PV projects to exchange project results at the highest level at the University of Oxford this summer.

On 25th and 26thJune 2018 the all major EU-funded projects working on perovskite PV technology will gather at ...

The 12th edition of the International School on Hybrid and Organic Photovoltaics (ISOPHOS®) will be held from the 2nd till 6th of September 2018 in the wonderful atmosphere of Castiglione della Pescaia (Tuscany, Italy) , an ancient seaside town grown around a medieval fortress and a large fishery, from which it got its designation.

In the first months of 2018 the EU funded project CHEOPS - dedicated to achieving low-cost and highly efficient perovskite solar cells - has presented a number of encouraging results to improve this renewable energy technology. Here are the highlights from the most recent journal publications and conference presentations:

Present status and future prospects of perovskite photovoltaicsH. J. Snaith, Nature Materials Vol. 17 May 2018 p. 372-276In his comment in Nature Materials from April 2018, Henry J. Snaith from the University of Oxford highlights the “rigorous life-cycle assessment” of perovskite-on-silicon tandem cells and module productions conducted by the two CHEOPS partners Oxford PV and SmartGreenScans. View the entire article without subscription here.